Profile: It's one thing to hit.328/.420/.590 while playing in offense-friendly Albuquerque, but it's quite another to do it while actually putting up better stats on the road. There's no doubt that Castellanos can hit after a cumulative line of.294/.365/.509 in five minor league seasons, but he's been pegged as someone who can't hit well enough to be a major league corner outfielder and can't field well enough to stick at second or third base. The Dodgers attempted the latter in 2012 with varying degrees of success, and Castellanos remains in the mix to be a righty bat off the bench in the major leagues. (Mike Petriello)

The Quick Opinion: Alex Castellanos has done nothing but hit in the minors, though he's been held back by an inability to find a home on defense, going from the infield to the outfield and back again. His bat deserves a chance, but opportunity may be sparse on a full Dodger roster.

Profile: Alex Castellanos' monster 2012 Triple-A line (.328/.420/.590) turned into merely a good one (.257/.347/.468) in 2013, and yet another attempt to make him an infielder failed. While the bat could still play off the bench, he's going to turn 28 during the 2014 season, has only 43 major league plate appearances to his name, and is limited to the corner outfield spots. Castellanos was traded to the Red Sox in October but lasted only a few weeks before being DFA'd, and is likely a Quad-A type at best going forward. (Mike Petriello)

The Quick Opinion: Castellanos has shown he can hit in the minors, but hasn't been able to convert that into a big league career, and without a real defensive home, he's running out of time. Needless to say, he's not much of a fantasy option.